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Project Management Training Company Comparing PMBOK ® Guide 4 th Edition, PMBOK ® Guide 5 th Edition and ISO 21500 STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A. Avenue de la Gare 10 | 1003 Lausanne | Switzerland Web: www.sts.ch | E-mail: [email protected] | Phone: +41 21 510 11 50 A company

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Comparing PMBOK 5th, 4th and ISO 21500 Standards that are widely used in project Management profession. PMBOK, PMI, PMP are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. STS expert Thierry Labriet, PMP provides detailed analysis of the standards.

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  • 1. Project Management Training CompanyComparing PMBOK Guide 4th Edition, PMBOK Guide 5th Edition and ISO 21500STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A. Avenue de la Gare 10 | 1003 Lausanne | Switzerland Web: www.sts.ch | E-mail: [email protected] | Phone: +41 21 510 11 50Acompany

2. CONTENTS1Foreword from the Author ................................................................................. 22Executive summary .......................................................................................... 33Process organization in the standards ................................................................. 44Summary of the major changes TO processes ..................................................... 85Detailed analysis.............................................................................................. 9 5.1Project Integration Management .................................................................. 95.2Project Scope Management ....................................................................... 125.3Project Time Management......................................................................... 145.4Project Cost Management ......................................................................... 165.5Project Quality Management...................................................................... 175.6Project Human Resource Management ........................................................ 185.7Project Communications Management ........................................................ 205.8Project Risk Management.......................................................................... 225.9Project Procurement Management.............................................................. 245.10 Project Stakeholder Management ............................................................... 25 6Conclusion for specialists ................................................................................ 267Management Conclusion ................................................................................. 268STS and Demos: Global capability, local expertise.............................................. 27PMI, PMBOK, PMP and CAPM are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch1 3. 1 FOREWORD FROM THE AUTHOR National and international standards exist, and these have initiated the emergence of project management certifications that mostly target individuals rather than organizations. Despite this orientation, most project management standards are process-oriented. Therefore, many companies have developed in-house methodologies that are more or less inspired by these standards. Currently, three major process-oriented certification bodies have a dominant and significant influence in Switzerland and across Europe: The Project Management Institute (PMI) and its Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK) Guide. The Office of Government Commerce and PRINCE2 , published in 1996 by a consortium of 150 European organizations. The Swiss Federal Strategy Unit for IT, the owner of the HERMES method.The International Project Management Association is not considered here since it is not process-oriented but rather competencies-oriented when considering its certification framework. In 2006, the British Standards Institute, a member of ISO, initiated a request towards ISO to work on defining a standard for project management. ISO launched a new Technical Committee to deal with project management: TC236. This committee comprises 37 participating countries and 14 observing countries. The TC236 secretariat has published guidance on project management, namely ISO 21500:2012, which was released in September 2012. Since the PMBOK Guide has been approved by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), and as the ANSI is the TC236 secretariat, some similarities were expected between the PMBOK Guide and the ISO 21500:2012 standard. This white paper aims to highlight the major similarities and differences between the ANSI and ISO standards, i.e. between the PMBOK Guide and ISO 21500:2012 standard. Both PMBOK Guides, that is the 4th and 5th editions, are covered in this white paper.Thierry Labriet, PMP Senior Consultant at STS SA STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch2 4. 2 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The two releases of the PMBOK Guide and ISO 21500 standard are very close. They present a set of processes that have been organized in the same way, namely by project management stage and project management topic. The ISO standard is only 47 pages and is limited to the introduction of the processes, their inputs and their outputs. Both PMBOK Guides describe, over more than 450 pages, project management processes, their inputs, their outputs and their associated tools and techniques. In chronological order, the ANSI standard came first, with the 4th edition of the PMBOK Guide. The ISO standard has been approved by national committees and was released in September 2012. The new edition of the PMBOK Guide was released at the end of 2012. ISO uses most of the PMBOK Guide 4th processes but it has introduced minor adaptations: the risk knowledge area has been repositioned, as has human resource management. The major change is related to stakeholder management; the subject group (aka knowledge area) has been introduced by ISO and it also appears in the new PMBOK Guide release. The two processes introduced by ISO in this subject group were two processes of the communication knowledge area of the PMBOK Guide 4th edition. ISO processes are more likely to be oriented towards a cascade approach of the scope definition rather than an iterative approach. Therefore, the ISO standard is perhaps less attractive for agile organizations. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch3 5. 3 PROCESS ORGANIZATION IN THE STANDARDS Both standards (ANSI and ISO) are structured into project management stages (project management, not project stages or phases) and project management topics: PMBOK Guide 4thISO 21500PMBOK Guide 5thStages5 process groups5 process groups5 process groupsTopics9 knowledge areas10 subject groups10 knowledge areasProcesses42 processes39 processes47 processesNB: Since the PMBOK Guide 4th came first, we use the wording process groups and knowledge areas in this document.The first noticeable factor is the introduction of a new knowledge area in the ISO norm and the PMBOK Guide 5th edition: stakeholder management. PMBOK Guide 4th Process Groups1. 2. 3. 4.ISO 21500Initiating Planning Executing Monitoring & Controlling 5. ClosingKnowledge Areas1. 2. 3. 4.5. ClosingInitiating Planning Executing Monitoring & Controlling 5. Closing1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.1. Integration 2. Scope 3. Time 4. Cost 5. Quality 6. Resource 7. Communication 8. Risk 9. Procurement 10. Stakeholder1. Integration 2. Scope 3. Time 4. Cost 5. Quality 6. Human Resource 7. Communications 8. Risk 9. Procurement 10. StakeholderIntegration Scope Time Cost Quality Human Resource Communications Risk ProcurementInitiating Planning Implementing ControllingPMBOK Guide 5th 1. 2. 3. 4.NB: In both PMBOK Guides, the full name of the knowledge areas follows the pattern Management>: Integration is described by PMI as Project Integration Management. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch4 6. The set of processes in the PMBOK Guide 4th edition is the following: PMBOK Guide 4thInitiating 4.1 Develop Project CharterIntegrationPlanning 4.2 Develop Project Management PlanExecuting 4.3 Direct and Manage Project ExecutionMonitoring & Controlling 4.4 Monitor and Control Project Work 4.5 Perform Integrated Change ControlScope5.1 Collect Requirements 5.2 Define Scope 5.3 Create WBS6.6 Control ScheduleTime7.1 Estimate Costs 7.2 Determine Budget7.3 Control CostsCost4.6 Close Project or Phase5.4 Verify Scope 5.5 Control Scope6.1 Define Activities 6.2 Sequence Activities 6.3 Estimate Activity Resources 6.4 Estimate Activity Durations 6.5 Develop ScheduleClosing8.1 Plan QualityHuman ResourcesCommunications10.1 Identify Stakeholders8.2 Perform Quality Assurance9.1 Develop HR PlanQuality9.2 Acquire Project Team 9.3 Develop Project Team 9.4 Manage Project Team10.2 Plan Communications10.3 Distribute Information 10.4 Manage Stakeholders ExpectationsRisk11.1 Plan Risk Management 11.2 Identify Risks 11.3 Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis 11.4 Perform Quantitative Risk Analysis 11.5 Plan Risk ResponsesProcurement12.1 Plan Procurements8.3 Perform Quality Control10.5 Report Performance11.6 Monitor and Control Risks12.2 Conduct Procurements12.3 Administer Procurements12.4 Close Procurements PMI STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch5 7. ISO presents the following set of processes: ISO 21500 StandardIntegrationStakeholdersInitiating 4.3.2 Develop Project CharterPlanning 4.3.3 Develop Project Plans4.3.9 Identify StakeholdersImplementing 4.3.4 Direct Project WorkResource4.3.15 Establish Project Team4.3.5 Control Project Work 4.3.6 Control ChangesClosing 4.3.7 Close Project Phase or Project 4.3.8 Collect Lessons Learned4.3.10 Manage Stakeholders 4.3.11 Define Scope 4.3.12 Create WBS 4.3.13 Define ActivitiesScopeControlling4.3.16 Estimate Resources 4.3.17 Define Project Organization4.3.14 Control Scope4.3.18 Develop Project Team4.3.19 Control Resources 4.3.20 Manage Project Team 4.3.24 Control ScheduleTime4.3.21 Sequence Activities 4.3.22 Estimate Activity Durations 4.3.23 Develop ScheduleCost4.3.25 Estimate Costs 4.3.26 Develop Budget4.3.27 Control CostsRisk4.3.28 Identify Risks 4.3.29 Assess Risks4.3.30 Treat Risks4.3.31 Control RisksQuality4.3.32 Plan Quality4.3.33 Perform Quality Assurance4.3.34 Perform Quality ControlProcurement4.3.35 Plan Procurements4.3.36 Select Suppliers4.3.37 Administer ContractsCommunications4.3.38 Plan Communications4.3.39 Distribute 4.3.40 Manage Information CommunicationThis table is reproduced with the permission of ISO. ISO 25000:2012 can be obtained from any ISO member and from ISO at www.iso.org. Copyright remains with ISO. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch6 8. The PMBOK Guide 5th edition introduces the following processes: PMBOK Guide 5thIntegrationInitiating 4.1 Develop Project CharterPlanning 4.2 Develop Project Management PlanExecuting 4.3 Direct and Manage Project ExecutionMonitoring & Controlling 4.4 Monitor and Control Project Work 4.5 Perform Integrated Change ControlScope5.1 Plan Scope Management 5.2 Collect Requirements 5.3 Define Scope 5.4 Create WBS6.7 Control ScheduleTime7.4 Control CostsCost7.1 Plan Cost Management 7.2 Estimate Costs 7.3 Determine Budget4.6 Close Project or Phase5.5 Validate Scope 5.6 Control Scope6.1 Plan Schedule Management 6.2 Define Activities 6.3 Sequence Activities 6.4 Estimate Activity Resources 6.5 Estimate Activity Durations 6.6 Develop ScheduleClosing8.1 Plan Quality Management8.2 Perform Quality Assurance9.1 Plan HR Management9.2 Acquire Project Team 9.3 Develop Project Team 9.4 Manage Project TeamCommunications10.1 Plan Communications Management10.2 Manage CommunicationsRisk11.1 Plan Risk Management 11.2 Identify Risks 11.3 Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis 11.4 Perform Quantitative Risk Analysis 11.5 Plan Risk ResponsesQualityHuman Resources10.3 Control Communications 11.6 Control Risks12.1 Plan Procurement ManagementProcurementStakeholder8.3 Control Quality13.1 Identify Stakeholders12.2 Conduct Procurements12.3 Control Procurements13.2 Plan Stakeholder Management13.3 Manage Stakeholder Engagement12.4 Close Procurements13.4 Control Stakeholder Management PMI STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch7 9. 4 SUMMARY OF THE MAJOR CHANGES TO PROCESSES The PMBOK Guide 4th edition details 42 processes. From the PMBOK Guide 4th, ISO uses 32 processes or direct equivalents, repositions two processes (Develop HR Plan and Acquire Project Team are repositioned into Establish Project Team and Define Project Organization) ... merges 22 processes into two (Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis and Perform Quantitative Risk Analysis are merged into Assess Risks, while Distribute Information and Report Performance are merged into Distribute Information) omits four processes (Collect Management, Close Procurements)Requirements,VerifyScope,PlanRisk introduces three processes (Collect Lessons Learned, Control Resources, Manage Communication) The ISO standard has 39 processes.The PMBOK Guide 5th, compared with its predecessor adds four processes to plan the management of knowledge areas introduces two new controlling processes (Control Communications, Control Stakeholder Management) merges two processes (Distribute Information and Report Performance) into a repositioned process (Manage Communications) reallocates two processes in the new stakeholder knowledge area This edition of the PMBOK Guide details 47 processes. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch8 10. 5 DETAILED ANALYSIS Following the structure of the PMBOK Guide 4th edition, the major differences between the three references are now detailed by knowledge area. Since this structure did not include the stakeholder knowledge area, it is explained at the end of this document. Therefore, the analysis will not strictly follow the structure of the ISO standard.5.1 PROJECT INTEGRATION MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processes Process Whats new in ISO?ISO 21500 processesPMBOK Guide 5th processesDevelop Project CharterDevelop Project CharterDevelop Project CharterNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?In addition to the expert judgment, the 5 th edition proposes facilitation techniques to build the project charter. These techniques were introduced in the 5th edition. Typical facilitation techniques include brainstorming, the Delphi technique, problem solving, meetings, facilitation, etc.ProcessDevelop Project Management PlanWhats new in ISO?ISO reinforces the distinction between the baselines and management plans. The Project Management Plan combines the management plans of the different knowledge areas, such as the scope management plan and the risk management plan, which are called subsidiary plans. The project plan contains the baselines of the project, in terms of scope, schedule, resources, risks, etc.Whats new in the 5th edition?For both frameworks of the PMI, the Project Management Plan integrates and consolidates all the subsidiary management plans and baselines. Thus, the Project Management Plan comprises two major sections: subsidiary management plans and baselines. This is consistent with the previous edition.Develop Project Plans STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.chDevelop Project Management Plan9 11. PMBOK Guide 4th processes ProcessWhats new in ISO?Direct and Manage Project ExecutionISO 21500 processes Direct Project WorkPMBOK Guide 5th processes Direct and Manage Project ExecutionChange requests are not an input of the Direct Project Work process. The ANSI justifies such changes because when the work is being undertaken, colleagues may request process adaptations, discover new ways to perform, etc. More significantly, ISO introduces the issue log into its standard. This clear deliverable flows between processes when it is a component of the project documentation for the ANSI. The issue log is allocated at the same level as the risk register in the ISO standard.Whats new in the 5th edition?Meetings (rather than facilitation techniques) are introduced as a technique to manage project execution. These meetings might trigger the creation of a change request when dealing with scope change proposals, process adaptations, etc.ProcessMonitor and Control Project WorkWhats new in ISO?Control Project WorkMonitor and Control Project WorkFor ISO, this process is in charge of the transformation of progress data into progress reports and forecasts. In the ANSI standard, this transformation occurs in the Report Performance process, which is also a controlling process. ISO also introduces Project Handover Reports but does not detail its use.Whats new in the 5th edition?The new edition of the ANSI standard moves in the same direction as ISO. Forecast and work performance information is analyzed in this process in order to produce performance reports.ProcessPerform Integrated Change ControlWhats new in ISO?ISO uses a more formal change register, whereas it is a de facto document in the ANSI standard.Whats new in the 5th edition?The change register is also more formal, termed a change log. Change Control Tools are introduced in the 5th edition in order to facilitate configuration and change management.Control Changes STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.chPerform Integrated Change Control10 12. PMBOK Guide 4th processes ProcessWhats new in ISO?Whats new in the 5th edition?ProcessWhats new in ISO?ISO 21500 ProcessesPMBOK Guide 5th processesClose Project or PhaseClose Project Phase or ProjectClose Project or PhaseThe closure report and released resources are explicit outputs of the ISO process, which is a clear improvement. ISO uses project handover reports and certificates as formal inputs to confirm the production of expected deliverables at the expected level of quality. The 5th edition does not confirm the explicit use of the closure report and released resources. It stays very close to the 4th edition with the addition of analytical techniques and meetings as tools and techniques. Collect Lessons Learned This process has been introduced by ISO. This is a clear sign of the importance of knowledge management in learning organizations, even though it is not managed as a new knowledge area, as expected by many contributors. This process involves many situational outputs of other processes to produce a lessons learned document.Whats new in the 5th edition?This process has not yet been implemented in the ANSI standard. On the other hand, many process outputs now include Lessons Learned Documentation in the Organizational Process Assets Updates general deliverable. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch11 13. 5.2 PROJECT SCOPE MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processesISO 21500 processesPlan Scope ManagementProcessWhats new in the 5th edition?PMBOK Guide 5th processesThe new edition of the ANSI standard implements systematically a management plan for each knowledge area. This was an unclear area in the previous edition. Further, the scope management plan was not covered in any process but rather mentioned as a subsidiary plan of the project management plan, for instance. This new process has major outputs. The scope management plan details how the scope will be managed and what templates will be used. The requirement management plan is also very interesting since it details how the requirements will be managed from the start until the end and how the configuration management activities will be handled.ProcessCollect RequirementsWhats new in the 5th edition?The 5th edition has removed the inconsistent output of the Collect Requirements process, which is the management plan for the requirements.ProcessDefine ScopeWhats new in ISO?In this process, ISO places the creation of the requirements documentation and makes an interesting link between the scope and its contribution to the strategic goals of the company.Whats new in the 5th edition?Collect RequirementsDefine ScopeDefine ScopeNo major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch12 14. PMBOK Guide 4th processes ProcessCreate WBSWhats new in ISO?ISO 21500 processesNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?Create WBSPMBOK Guide 5th processes Create WBSWhereas ISO shows the WBS and its dictionary as the sole outputs of the process, the new edition of the ANSI standard keeps the term scope baseline. This is consistent with other knowledge areas. For instance, regarding time, planning processes issue a schedule baseline rather than a specific instance of a baseline such as a Gantt, a PERT, etc. The 4th edition had both outputs: a scope baseline, the WBS and its dictionary, which was somewhat redundant.ProcessDefine ActivitiesWhats new in ISO?This process has been moved by ISO in scope management. Detailed changes are shown in the next knowledge area.ProcessVerify ScopeValidate ScopeThe 5th edition introduces some interesting points regarding the validation (instead of verification) of the scope. Whats new in the 5th edition?The deliverable is not accepted simply upon the scope baseline but also on work performance data, that include the degree of compliance with requirements, the number of nonconformities and the severity of these nonconformities. This involves validation using group decision-making techniques.ProcessControl ScopeWhats new in ISO?No major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?Control ScopeNo major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.chControl Scope13 15. 5.3 PROJECT TIME MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processesISO 21500 processesPMBOK Guide 5th processes Plan Schedule ManagementProcess Whats new in the 5th edition?This new process details how time-related activities will be managed through the planning, the execution, the control and the closure of the project or phase.ProcessDefine ActivitiesWhats new in ISO?Except the fact that this process is listed in the scope subject group, there are no major changes compared with the ANSI standard.Whats new in the 5th edition?No major additions.ProcessSequence ActivitiesWhats new in ISO?Define ActivitiesSequence ActivitiesSequence ActivitiesEstimate ResourcesEstimate Activity ResourcesNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?Define ActivitiesNo major additions.ProcessEstimate Activity ResourcesWhats new in ISO?ISO has moved this process into the Resource subject group. The process Estimate Resources deals with all kinds of resources (as does the ANSI standard) but since ISO placed it in the Resource subject group, this group can no longer be HR only.Whats new in the 5th edition?Activity cost estimates and the risk register have been added to the list of inputs of the 4th edition, since risks and costs may affect resource selection. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch14 16. PMBOK Guide 4th processes Process Whats new in ISO?Estimate Activity DurationsISO 21500 processes Estimate Activity DurationsPMBOK Guide 5th processes Estimate Activity DurationsNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?The new edition of the ANSI standard adds the risk register as an input to estimate activity durations. This is interesting since there is a balance to strike between 1) identifying and managing risks as such and removing uncertainty from the estimates and 2) keeping minor uncertainties in the responsibility of the team member, and therefore in the duration estimate, because the amount at stake is more minor compared with the cost of managing the risk.ProcessDevelop ScheduleWhats new in ISO?ISO introduces schedule constraints as an input to schedule development, which makes sense. Such information might impose deadlines (constrained milestones) on schedule development.Develop ScheduleDevelop ScheduleFigure 6-18 related to the Critical Path Method offers a better view on how to calculate early starts and finishes of activities through a network diagram, according to their dependencies. Whats new in the 5th edition?It also depicts more in-depth the Critical Chain Method that is more and more used in project management.ProcessControl ScheduleWhats new in ISO?ISO, in the process description, emphasizes the necessity to produce schedule forecasts in order to trigger change requests, if required.Whats new in the 5th edition?The new edition adds schedule forecasts as outputs of this control process.A new technique of resource optimization has also been added: Resource Smoothing has the same aim as Resource Leveling except that it is kept within the activity float, so the project-critical path remains unchanged. Control Schedule STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.chControl Schedule15 17. 5.4 PROJECT COST MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processesISO 21500 processesPlan Cost ManagementProcess Whats new in the 5th edition?PMBOK Guide 5th processesLike other management plans, this has been added to cover the cost area. The cost management plan defines the control thresholds and rules to be applied when using performance measures as EVM does.ProcessEstimate CostsWhats new in ISO?No major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?No major additions. There is a minor point regarding weighted average cost estimates. In addition to the PERT estimates, the new ANSI standard presents a simple average (C+M+P)/3.ProcessDetermine BudgetWhats new in ISO?The ISO standard does not show evidence that the determined budget is time-based and can be used to determine funding requirements.Whats new in the 5th edition?Estimate CostsDevelop BudgetEstimate CostsDetermine BudgetThe new edition of the ANSI standard clarifies the inclusion of the contingency reserve in the cost baseline and the exclusion of the management reserve. This last reserve is part of the overall budget and funding requirements. Regarding the contingency reserve, a new figure improves the understanding of the PMI by showing an activity level and an overall contingency reserve. This might indicate that risks and their associated reserves are managed at the work package level, not necessarily at the activity level.ProcessControl CostsControl CostsWhats new in ISO?No major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?The 5th edition indicates reserve analysis as a new technique. This answers the needs of project managers that manage risky projects. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.chControl Costs16 18. 5.5 PROJECT QUALITY MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processes ProcessWhats new in ISO?Plan QualityISO 21500 processes Plan QualityPMBOK Guide 5th processes Plan Quality ManagementISO indicates the quality plan as an output of this process. This plan is a set of documents ensuring that quality standards will be met. This aims to cover the multiple outputs of the ANSI standard (quality metrics, quality checklists, process improvement plans, etc.). The quality management plan refers to the quality policy set by the permanent organization (or derived from it).Whats new in the 5th edition?The new edition introduces new tools (Seven basics quality tools: cause & effect diagrams, flowcharts, check sheets, Pareto diagrams, histograms, control charts and scatter diagrams) and removes flowcharting and proprietary quality management methodologies.ProcessPerform Quality AssuranceWhats new in ISO?Whats new in the 5th edition? ProcessPerform Quality AssurancePerform Quality AssuranceIn the ISO standard, quality assurance is mostly concerned with the assurance that quality requirements are communicated and understood and that established procedures are used. It also states that quality assurance activities ensure that [] product quality conforms to project quality requirements and standards, which is a concern mostly addressed in the Quality Control process of the ANSI standard. Quality Management and Control Tools are more detailed compared with in the previous edition.Perform Quality ControlPerform Quality ControlPerform Quality ControlWhats new in ISO?Formal inspection reports are mentioned as key outputs.Whats new in the 5th edition?No major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch17 19. 5.6 PROJECT HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT This knowledge area is presented differently in the two standards, and thus we need to take a few minutes to understand the two points of view. In both ANSI standards, the first process is Develop HR Plan (or Plan HR Management in the 5th edition). This process is in the planning process group. Other HR processes are execution processes: Acquire Project Team, Develop Project Team and Manage Project Team. In the ISO standard, we can see that a first process (Establish Project Team) appears in the Initiating Process group. Then, we follow the planning processes Estimate Resources and Define Project Organization. Develop Project Team is an execution process that has two controlling processes: Control Resources and Manage Project Team. Gosh! These two standards have completely different points of view! Not really! ISO puts the process Establish Project Team in the Initiating process group because it is seen as a process that is performed continuously throughout the project. ISO does not mean that the team is built first, then resources are estimated and finally the team is organized. When one looks at the inputs and outputs of this process, it is very close to the ANSI standard and corresponds to the Acquire Project Team process. Lets represent this graphically:ISO answers in this way a concern: the project needs a team to perform the initiating and planning activities. Therefore, this process can be performed iteratively, and the main team set-up occurs in the planning. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch18 20. PMBOK Guide 4th processes ProcessWhats new in ISO?Whats new in the 5th edition?Develop HR PlanISO 21500 processes Define Project OrganizationPMBOK Guide 5th processes Plan HR ManagementThe Define Project Organization process aims to secure commitments from the permanent organization (team leaders, for instance). Like the Develop HR Plan, its objective is also to define the roles and responsibilities in the project and to detail how resources will be acquired, rewarded and released. No major additions.ProcessAcquire Project TeamWhats new in ISO?The ISO standard introduces the idea of staff contracts in addition to staff assignments, which is interesting since, in many organizations, there is a more or less formal agreement between functional managers and the project management team.Whats new in the 5th edition?The new release of the ANSI standard introduces a new technique to acquire the project team: multi-criteria decision analysis uses more objective decision criteria such as cost, availability, experience, knowledge, etc.ProcessDevelop Project TeamWhats new in ISO?Acquire Project TeamDevelop Project TeamDevelop Project TeamManage Project TeamManage Project TeamNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?Establish Project TeamNo major additions.ProcessManage Project TeamWhats new in ISO?ISO adds a new output of this process: Staff Performance and Staff Appraisals. The distinction with Team Performance and Team Appraisals, which are outputs of the Develop Project Team, is not clear, but ISO presents such outputs as inputs for organizational personnel appraisals and lessons learned.Whats new in the 5th edition?No major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch19 21. PMBOK Guide 4th processes Process Whats new in ISO?ISO 21500 processesPMBOK Guide 5th processesControl Resources With this new process, ISO shows the importance of controlling resource assignments and allocations, the necessity to anticipate resource shortages or shifts and the need to address resource conflicts in availability.5.7 PROJECT COMMUNICATIONS MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processesISO 21500 processesPMBOK Guide 5th processesProcessIdentify StakeholdersWhats new in ISO?This process has been moved into the Stakeholders Group (see below).Whats new in the 5th edition?This process has been moved to the newly created knowledge area Project Stakeholder Management (see below).ProcessWhats new in ISO? Whats new in the 5th edition?Plan CommunicationsPlan CommunicationsPlan Communications ManagementISO identifies a clear input into this process (Role Descriptions) in order to build the communication plan. This was implicit in the ANSI standard since the Communication Management Plan includes responsibilities. No major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch20 22. PMBOK Guide 4th processesISO 21500 processesProcessDistribute Information + Report PerformanceWhats new in ISO?The processes Report Performance and Distribute Information have been merged into Distribute Information. This process has the same inputs as Report Performance, namely work performance information and forecasts. It thus aims to make the required information available to stakeholders (this is the same aim as the process Distribute Information). This process also manages information distribution from stakeholders to the project in order to provide inputs to other processes (e.g. risk management).Whats new in the 5th edition?ProcessWhats new in ISO?Whats new in the 5th edition?Distribute InformationPMBOK Guide 5th processes Manage CommunicationsThe new release of the ANSI standard also merges these two 4th edition processes. The tools and techniques presented by the PMI include performance reporting, which was initially in the Report Performance process. This repositioned process goes beyond the distribution of relevant information and seeks to ensure that the information being communicated to project stakeholders has been received and understood. It also provides opportunities for stakeholders to make further information requests. Manage CommunicationsControl CommunicationsThe purpose of this new process is to identify and resolve communication issues and to ensure communication needs are satisfied. The outputs are accurate and timely information (resolved communication issues) and change requests, mainly on the communication plan. The 5th edition of the ANSI considerations in this regard. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.chstandard is closeto the ISO21 23. 5.8 PROJECT RISK MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processes ProcessWhats new in the 5th edition?ISO 21500 processesPlan Risk ManagementPMBOK Guide 5th processes Plan Risk ManagementThe 5th edition has improved the list of tools and techniques for planning risk management. A non-exhaustive list of techniques is presented, as are the most important stakeholders who can provide their expert judgment. The list of inputs has also been repositioned to improve consistency.ProcessIdentify RisksWhats new in ISO?No major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?No major additions.ProcessPerform Qualitative Risk AnalysisWhats new in ISO?Identify RisksAssess RisksPerform Qualitative Risk AnalysisNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?Identify RisksNo major additions.ProcessPerform Quantitative Risk AnalysisWhats new in ISO?This interesting ANSI process has not been explicitly described by ISO. It may be considered to be included in Assess Risks, but the ANSI standard delivers real added-value by describing the statistical considerations and methods in-depth and by providing interesting outcomes such as a probabilistic analysis of the project.Whats new in the 5th edition?Perform Quantitative Risk AnalysisNo major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch22 24. PMBOK Guide 4th processes Process Whats new in ISO?Plan Risk ResponsesISO 21500 processes Treat RisksPMBOK Guide 5th processes Plan Risks ResponsesNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?The 5th edition has removed the output of this process. Risk-related Contract Decisions is no longer an outcome here.Such information is already provided through the updates on the procurement management plan, which is an element of the Project Management Plan.ProcessMonitor and Control RisksWhats new in ISO?Control RisksNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?Control RisksNo major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch23 25. 5.9 PROJECT PROCUREMENT MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processes ProcessWhats new in ISO?Plan ProcurementsISO 21500 processes Plan ProcurementsPMBOK Guide 5th processes Plan Procurement ManagementHere, ISO added in-house capacity and capability to the list of inputs, which may influence the make-or-buy analysis compared with the resource requirements. Existing contracts are also considered to be an input by ISO.Whats new in the 5th edition?The main change here is the addition of Market Research and Meetings as tools and techniques and the removal of Contract Types, which are now considered to be inputs into this process and as such are included in Organizational Process Assets.ProcessConduct ProcurementsWhats new in ISO?ISO states more formally that three main activities are covered by this process: 1) Obtaining supplier responses 2) Supplier selection 3) Negotiation prior to agreement of contract conditionsWhats new in the 5th edition?The PMBOK Guide 5th edition has changed few tools and techniques: Internet Search has been removed (this may be included under the general Advertising technique) and Analytical Techniques have been introduced.ProcessAdminister ProcurementsWhats new in ISO?The ISO standard does not detail two of the major concerns that are well highlighted in the ANSI standard: Payments and Claims Administration.Whats new in the 5th edition?Select SuppliersAdminister ContractsConduct ProcurementsControl ProcurementsNo major additions.ProcessClose ProcurementsWhats new in ISO?ISO considers this activity to be part of the integration process Close Project Phase or Project. This process identifies Completed Contracts as an output.Whats new in the 5th edition?Close ProcurementsNo major additions. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch24 26. 5.10 PROJECT STAKEHOLDER MANAGEMENT PMBOK Guide 4th processesISO 21500 processesPlan Stakeholder ManagementProcessWhats new in the 5th edition?ProcessPMBOK Guide 5th processesThis new process introduces a concern regarding stakeholder engagement. It details how current and desired levels of engagement are analyzed and highlights the fact that levels of engagement may change according to the project situation and timeframe. Alongside levels of engagement, this process also identifies the interrelations between stakeholders. Manage Stakeholders ExpectationsWhats new in ISO?Manage Stakeholder EngagementNo major additions.Whats new in the 5th edition?Manage StakeholdersNo major additions.Control Stakeholder ManagementProcessWhats new in the 5th edition?This new process ensures the comprehensive identification and listing of new stakeholders, reassessment of current stakeholders and removal of stakeholders no longer involved in the project. It also monitors changes in stakeholder interrelations and controls their engagement in order to adapt the stakeholder management strategy if needed. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch25 27. 6 CONCLUSION FOR SPECIALISTS This review demonstrates that the most important addition of the ISO standard is that of the formal knowledge necessary to deal with stakeholders. A step towards knowledge management has thus been made in the ISO standard without becoming a knowledge area by itself. The PMBOK Guide 5th edition also incorporates this major change. However, it has not reassigned processes into different knowledge areas as ISO has. The major addition of the PMBOK Guide 5th Edition compared with its predecessor is the fact that, from now on, a knowledge area always starts with the concerned subsidiary management plan. Many project managers expected to see the emergence of iterative approaches to decomposing the scope and executing the project: both standards are cascade approach-oriented. The most important point may be that current training does not need tremendous alteration to be consistent with the new PMBOK Guide. Simplification and consistency concerns drove this new edition, together with the new knowledge area.7 MANAGEMENT CONCLUSION Consistency between the ANSI and ISO standards will certainly help the profession. PMI certifications will continue to promote structured project management, and project managers (or associates) will help a number of organizations align their project management processes towards ISO recommendations. This mutual contribution is likely to continue since a new technical committee has been set up to deal with program and portfolio management. Moreover, the composition of this new committee is the same as the committee that produces the ISO 21500:2012 standard, which might lead the PMI to certify portfolio managers in the future. The PMI confirms its leading position in certifying program managers, project managers and associates who will feel at home in ISO-oriented organizations. In the future, if ISO 21500:2012 becomes the basis of certification, it will be an advantage for companies to have PMI-certified projects and program managers onboard. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch26 28. 8 STS AND DEMOS: GLOBAL CAPABILITY, LOCAL EXPERTISE STS, the specialist for project management training, consulting and certification Since its foundation in 1996, STS has been focused on developing project management skills of individuals and organizations worldwide. Furthermore, we are a world leading provider of sophisticated learning software in project management. Our learning tools include: the project management simulator SimulTrain numerous e-learning courses online prep tools for certification in project management knowledge test and skills assessmentOur learning tools have encountered a fantastic success and have so far contributed to the training of over 125000 project managers in 50 countries. The tools have been translated into 21 languages. STS is Registered Education Provider (N 2073) at PMI and is part of DEMOS Group (www.global.demosgroup.com)Demos Group: a global leader in learning and development Since 1972, Demos Group has grown to become a preferred partner of local and international companies, as well as International Institutions for professional training, development and consulting. With over 8,000 expert trainers in 16 countries worldwide, we have the experience, expertise, flexibility and resources to support your organization with its international learning, development and HR consulting projects. Organizations and businesses that continuously pursue improvement for themselves and their employees remain successful and competitive. At Demos Group, we enable organizations to better themselves through our innovative learning solutions and consulting services: Professional training: o Open training courses (including diploma-awarding and certificate courses) and in-company programs o Customized learning solutions o E-learning modules and Blended learning Consulting services: strategy development, organizational effectiveness, and human resources management Managed services: logistics, administrative management, taxes, legal reporting and vendor management STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch27 29. STS Sauter Training & Simulation S.A., www.sts.ch28